January 7, 2011

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It was supposed to be a "historic moment" in American governance, when Tea Party Republicans renewed the country’s connection to the Constitution by reading the document in its entirety on the House floor.

The constitutional "scholars" missed an entire section of what they described as a "sacred document," and skipped part of another section. And they failed to notice the omission until being notified of it after the "historic moment" was done.

The official explanation was that pages of the notebook pulled together by the manager of the show—Congressman Bob Goodlatte, R-Virginia—stuck together when passed from one sweaty congressman’s hand to the next. ("The Constitution was placed in a three-ring binder, and the pages simply stuck together," explained an embarrassed Goodlatte’s embarrassed communications director, Kathryn Rexrode.)

So what sections did they miss?

Article 4 Section 4, which reads: "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic Violence."

For those Tea Partisans who want to end the election of senators and generally diminish democracy, that’s the section that bars the establishment of monarchies and other forms of dictatorship.

The "scholars" also missed the first part of "Article 5 Section 1," which reads: "Each House shall be the Judge of the Elections, Returns and Qualifications of its own Members…"

Goodlatte showed up on the floor Thursday afternoon, after the formal reading was done, to read the missing sections back into the Constitution.

But the delegates and the commissioner remain excluded from participation in key workings of the House, meaning, as Washington, DC, Mayor Vincent Gray noted, that the constitutional "scholars" who do not know the Constitution have honored America’s struggle against autocracy by denying hundreds of thousands of Americans—most of them people of color—even "the smallest sliver of democracy absolutely imaginable."

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